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When I Look Up Images I Get Several Photos But When I Click On A Photo Only The First Photo Will

How can I make photos appear on Google Images?

The reason the photos appear in Google Images is because people uploaded these photos on their blogs, on their own websites, or on any site that allowed them to upload photos and be viewed publicly. If you noticed, when you click a photo, the website where it came from is usually there too. +

So, for example, when you search cars:
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&so...

several images of cars appear. When you click on the first one (mine is from maniacworld.com), then maniac world webpage will appear (which is the page the car was found by Google). Then you click see full image, then you see the photo without the site.

Another one would be the car image from newsportcarrase.blogspot.com/
If you click the image, you will see the post from the website where the image was used, then when you click See full image, you go to the next page without the website, just the image itself.

So, again, you do not submit images to Google so it will appear in Google images. You upload these photos on websites that allow you to share the photos publicly. Then when Google spider (that is really the term) crawls on the webpage where you put the image, it will index the image you uploaded there, and it would appear in the search results. This is likely to happen if the image you uploaded has a file name that is descriptive or an image description when you uploaded it to the site.

To understand more about this, read the article:

http://www.gfanatic.com/submit-add-image...

Multiple images in one photo?

I know what you are talking about, and it is NOT multiple exposure. That is a technique with primarily film cameras in which more than one photo is taken on a frame of film.

What you are wanting to do is actually very simple. First, the camera MUST be tripod mounted and all exposures for each shot the same. Then just take a photo of the person in one position, then take another photo with the person in another position, then another photo with the person in another position, (and wearing different clothes if wanted).

Then in Photoshop all you do is begin stacking one photo on top of the other. So you will open the first photo. Then open the second photo. Select the MOVE tool and drag the second photo on top of the first photo. Hold the shift key while dragging and the photos will align perfectly. This creates a LAYER. The top photo is covering your bottom photo. So all you do is then get the ERASER tool and erase away all of the photo except for your subject. When you do this, you will be revealing the photo below, and thus the subject in a different position. So now you have your photo with the subject in two different positions. Then you do the same thing again with the third photo. Drag it on top of the photo you just finished. This will create yet another layer. Again, just get the eraser tool and erase away all parts of the photo except your subject. You will then be revealing the layer directly under your top layer, So now, you have a photo with 3 subjects in different positions. You just keep doing this for as many photos as you took for the project. If you took several photos, you will have a layer for each photo and will erase away everything but the subject, thus revealing the subjects below.

The Photoshop work is quite easy. Just be sure all your photos match up exactly. This is why you MUST have the camera tripod mounted for all the shots and why all exposures must be the same.

steve

How can I post several pictures on Facebook?

Facebook photos are one of the most popular features on the world's largest social network. People post various types of photos on Facebook for different reasons. For example:Facebook Profile Pictures - Every user can display a small profile picture to represent themselves and change it as often as they like.Facebook Cover Photos - Users also have a big photo display space across the top of their profile pages. The horizontal images that users can display up there are called Facebook cover photos. These large images also can be changed frequently, just like profile photos.Status Photos - People can post a photo through Facebook's publisher box, which is then displayed in their friends' news feeds. The photo can either serve as a standalone status update or illustrate an accompanying text status message. People can also publish groupings of photos through the Facebook publisher box, typically using the "create a photo album" function.Facebook Photo Albums - Photo albums on the social network are just a group of photos displayed together. You can title them, caption each of the images inside, add photos later, publish them to your friends' news feeds and organize the albums in various other ways, too.Facebook Mobile Photos - Facebook has a standalone photo app for Apple iOS devices, called Facebook Camera. Facebook's other mobile apps have more limited photo management capabilities. There also are other third-party apps are available to help people do more with Facebook photos on mobile devices.Privacy of Facebook Photos - Users have options for how public or private they want their photos to be, as this guide to Facebook photo privacyexplains.Facebook Photo Tag - Users can "tag" themselves and other users who appear in photos uploaded to Facebook, as this guide to adding a tag to a Facebook photo explains.Facebook Photo FunctionsAdding, organizing and managing your Facebook photos can be challenging, especially since the social network likes to change its user interface fairly frequently. Just when you've gotten used to the menus for doing something--like managing your photo albums or adding a new profile picture--it seems the user interface is changed, or there are new size requirements.

Why do I look good in the mirror but bad in photos?

Quite simply, your face is the wrong way round.As a portrait photographer, I've found about 90% of people will say they hate having their photo taken and are the least photogenic person in their family (if not the world).What I discovered was when I flip the image of someone on my computer, most people prefer it.We have spent our lives seeing our faces in the mirror, and we have become used to seeing our face that way round. So when we reverse that image, it doesn't look right. No one has a perfectly symmetrical  face.Most people part their hair on one side rather than the other.Most people have one eye slightly larger than the other.Most people have one curvier eyebrow and one straighter or pointier.Most people smile slightly more out of one side of their mouth than the other.Most people have a mole, scar or facial feature on one side and not the other.And so it goes on.So if your nose goes 2mm to the left, then when your image is the other way round it appears to be 4mm to the right of where you're expecting it to be.When you add all these things together, when you see your face in reverse to how you expect it to be, it's you, but not you. And that makes you feel uncomfortable.Consider this image of one of the world's most famous faces - Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa. Which version to you prefer - the one on the left or right? (photo adjusted from Wikipedia - Mona Lisa)When I have shown this image to photography clubs I have given talks to on portraiture, 90% of the audience prefer the one on the left - the way she was originally painted. When I put up an image like this (original and flipped side by side) of someone no one knows, I get a 50/50 split in preference.And that's because most of us are more far more comfortable with what's familiar.So when you look at a family photo, or group shot, everyone else looks as you expect them to - the way you see them every day. But you don't. Your face is the wrong way round to what you are expecting. So you think you are the unphotogenic one. Meanwhile, everyone else is thinking exactly the same thing. So when you say to your sister - "you look great, but I look awful in this" - she thinks you're crazy, because to her you look fine and she thinks she's the odd looking one.Find a photo of yourself and hold it up in the mirror - look at its reflection. And if it looks better to you that way round, it will look fine to everyone else the normal way round.

How can i brighten multiple photos in photoshop?

You are looking for actions and batch processing. I'm on a fairly ancient version of Photoshop, but this should get you close...

Go to the window pulldown and select Actions. Create a new action, hit record. Open up one of the files, make the adjustments you want to make, save the file, close it, and stop the recording in the Actions palette.

Then go to the file pulldown menu--> Automate --> Batch --> select the new action you created--> find the folder that has your images (I would suggest making a duplicate folder in case something goes wrong - you want to keep those originals safe!) --> click on Override, select the folder to save, click on Override and hit ok.

What's it called when a bunch of pictures are put together to make one picture?

There are a couple of different ways multiple pictures could be put together.

This could be considered a collage, and if you want to make one you can use LifePics' collage software: http://www.lifepics.com

If you mean multiple of the same photo but in different colors, this pop art Andy Warhol's Marilyn piece is what comes to mind: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marilyn_Diptych

It could also be a photo mosaic where small tiles of pictures are either used as is, or are colorized to be like little puzzle pieces that make up a bigger picture: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_mosaic

My Canon camera takes two of every photo? Why?

The only reason a Canon would capture two images is if the image type was set to RAW. With this setting, a RAW and a JPEG photo will be captured at the same time.

Page 82 in your owners manual covers this, Page 80 to 82 explane how to change this.

Also, if this inadvertantly happens in the future. Once downloaded, simply open the folder containing the photos, right click inside the folder (an open space, not on top of a file), then from the window that opens, select the option "Sort by" then select "Type"

If "Type is not listed, select "More..." then add "Type" to the sort options, then select it.

This will group all the RAW files together, All the JPEG files together, etc. This allows the whole group to be moved or deleted together, rather than pickine every other one out.

How can I find a person by photo?

Your question was: How can I get someone’s details with a photo?I am not sure if I understand your question correctly and assume you mean that you want to obtain information about a person including a photograph of that person. Well if you have no way of contacting the person and ask him/her directly then, what most people do is to search on Google. Very often, you will find persons with the same name on Facebook, LinkedIn or similar websites. Usually, with the details you already know about her/him you should be able to decide which is the one you are looking for.If your starting point is not a name but say a phone number, then try apps such as TrueCaller, which usually return the name of a person associated with that phone number. If you search long enough or are even willing to pay for it, you can get a lot of information about most people - more than what most of us want to be public knowledge.

Can I post multiple photos in Instagram without cropping them into only square-sized pictures?

Yes, you can. Surely go ahead -Instagram is around for awhile, people keep asking me what is the size of Instagram pictures. Instagram image size used to be 612px by 612px but then switched to 640px by 640px and on July 2015 switched to 1080px by 1080px to keep up with Retina and other high resolution displays available on smartphones, tablets and laptops.Later that year Instagram introduced vertical and horizontal image that are widely used by Instagrammers. And here are maximums image sizes for square, vertical and horizontal images. You can now use any image size between those.Square Image: 1080px in width by 1080px in heightVertical Image: 1080px in width by 1350px in heightHorizontal Image: 1080px in width by 566px in heightCurrent image size is 1080px in width X 1080px in height. We expect that Instagram will keep this image size for an extended period of time, otherwise they would have bumped image size even more. While the image size is bumped to 1080px by 1080px, it is still scaled down to 640px by 640px using CSS on their website.Which means that these images will look better on high-resolution displays such as Retina (HiDPI). You don’t need to get into these technical details and remember to keep your image size 1080px by 1080px.Below you can see sample Instagram image and its dimensions:Square Instagram Image (Original Size)Vertical Instagram ImageHorizontal Instagram ImageI hope this was helpful.—Good day :)Thanks for scrolling.

How do I edit a photo that was sent to me back to original?

Thanks for the ask. I don't know what editing program you're using or whether you are shooting jpegs or raw, but I shoot 100% raw and use only Adobe Lightroom plus Photoshop CC Classic 2018 (only by subscription). But for a long time I shot jpegs and processed in Photoshop Elements. Adobe products are the only ones I am familiar with.Lightroom is “non-destructive.” Regardless whether you are editing jpegs or raw captures, Lightroom does nothing at all to your original file. All edits are recorded in a separate “sidecar” file that has the instructions. The only way to save the edited version is to export (output) it to a JPEG or Tiff. If you wish to reedit the original file you can do it and do it and do it over and over in a “non-destructive” program. That's the beauty of them.Photoshop (and Elements) is a “pixel level" editor. It is “destructive” in the sense that it makes permanent changes to the original file, whether it is a JPEG or raw. I realized that years ago when I first started, but I discovered a very simply workaround: always “save as" whatever you have done. It doesn't matter if it's jpeg or raw, so long as you retain the original straight from the camera capture you can always go back to it and do something else. The trick is to never work on the original itself. Always “save as" a new version, whether jpeg or Tiff or whatever, keep the original as it came from the camera. Yes, it takes up space, but “destructive” editors make permanent changes once you save them, so no, you can't go back on those edits, but you can start over with a fresh copy of the untouched original.Again, if the app is NON-destructive like Lightroom, you can do whatever you want and never have to worry that you can't go back, but Lightroom is also somewhat limited. There are things that Photoshop can do, or do better, which is why the basic Creative Cloud is packaged with both Lightroom and Photoshop. I always start in Lightroom, finish probably 80 or more percent in Lightroom, and only go into Photoshop to finish something that Photoshop does better.

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